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A gold egg enameled with translucent white that reveals an eighteen karat gold within the shell that holds a smaller golden egg yolk. In Easter of 1885, made by Erik Koliin from the house of Faberge for Alexander III as a present to Maria Feodorovna. Here is the list of the Imperial egg made for Tsar Alexander II and Nicholas II for Dowager Maria Feodorovna and Empress Alexandria Fyodorovna. Due to the creativity of Faberge, the giving of Easter egg had become a yearly tradition. Inspired by a piece that he once saw on a fair, he deigned the hen egg made by his then master-worker Erik Kolin. Faberge then was tasked to create the Easter egg to surprise his wife, Maria. Upon submission, the jewelry was thoroughly examined and found no fault on Faberge's piece. The tsar gave a test to Faberge and another famous jeweler, they were to make a replica of the double-headed bracelet. The late Tsar Alexander III wanted to surprise his spouse by giving her an Easter egg. An egg to symbolize fertility and the resurrection of Christ, like how Mary Magdalene showed an egg to the then king, but as the king laugh, the egg turned into red, which signifies the resurrection of Christ. The imperial egg was initially made to look straightforward, with surprises concealed inside. Most eggs are made from an enameled gold shell, but some are carved from a block lapis lazuli, rock crystals, silver, and later even steel. A typical Easter egg made by the house of Faberge would have the mark of Faberge, the year of production and the monogram of the receiver engraved on a diamond, positioned on top of the egg. Some of the eggs that denote the true meaning of Easter are the Hen egg of 1885, the imperial resurrection egg of 1889, and the winter egg of 1913, and the Red Cross egg of 1915. The winter egg was one of the imperial eggs that resurfaced in 1913 that was found in a shoebox resting under a bed in London. Most artworks of the house of Faberge were considered derivative, inspired by what Faberge had already seen on display except for the winter egg. This, in turn, allows him to stamp the Romanov crest. Alexander III was very impressed with Faberge's artworks that he granted him a royal warrant making him goldsmith to the imperial crown.
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They completed most of the Imperial Easter egg ever made. These are Henry Wickstrom and Mickhael Perkhin. Either the jewelry would get a stamp of approval, or it is hammered and destroyed. It was said that he would have two pieces beside his workmasters, a stamp, and a hammer. He began his first jewelry shop just down the road from his father's old shop. His father was awarded Master Goldsmith and opened a jewelry shop in Saint Petersburg. The name Faberge came from the old French word "favori," which means artisan or manufacturer. The son of Gustav and Charlotte Faberge born in 1846.
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Peter Carl Faberge is considered the greatest goldsmith during his times. The confiscated Imperial Faberge eggs were hidden and listed in the Armory Museum of Kremlin. There are fifty imperial eggs, the last two pieces are unfinished due to the start of World War I.
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The only itemized and most popular Faberge eggs are made for the Romanov Imperial family. The number of Faberge eggs are not exactly known for some are untraced or of unknown location. Faberge egg, an ornamented egg made by the famous house of Faberge.